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					Originally Posted by  innerSpaceman
					 
				 
				Oh, and see I thought The Aviator was also a rock-solid film. I didn't like it all that much, but - for the biography genre - it was as rock-solid as just about any (and less than a handful of that genre stand out as fantatastic). 
  
Similarly, in the mob-genre - yeah, The Departed was rock-solid. And only a handful in that genre stand out as fantastic (one of them by Marty himself). 
  
I just don't think rock-solid necessarily qualifies for Best Picture. The Departed was well-crafted. Its awards for editing and screenplay were well-deserved imo. And yeah, before he dies, give the award to Scorcese for any decent thing he's nominated for. 
			
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 Hmm, okay, I was only referring (by not really referring) to Scorsese's best director nod.  

 I thought The Aviator was okay for what it was, but to me it was not even close to best picture material.   Of the nominated films for BP this year, I had not seen all of them, so in all honesty I was unable to make a real personal judgment call on what should win.  But, I was very happy that The Queen (fine film that it was) did not score the BP Oscar.  Will I think The Departed is still a best picture worthy film 10 years from now, prolly not and not that this matters. I think it's been covered before that the BP Oscar is more often than not awarded to the best picture by someone's standards.
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				 But it rankles that Best Picture went to a remake, just as I bemoan that the best actor and actress nods went to real-person immitators. There was less CREATION in these awarded films and roles, and I think that detracts from their overall greatness.
			
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 Well, this has been done before, a lot, meaning actors portraying real-person imitators.  
For instance:
Best Actor:
* Yul Brynner -- The King and I {"The King"}  
* Alec Guinness -- The Bridge on the River Kwai {"Colonel Nicholson"}  
* Paul Scofield -- A Man for All Seasons {"Sir Thomas More"}  
* George C. Scott -- Patton {"General George S. Patton, Jr."} 
* Gene Hackman -- The French Connection {"Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle"}  
* Robert De Niro -- Raging Bull {"Jake LaMotta"}  
* Ben Kingsley -- Gandhi {"Mahatma Gandhi"}  
* Daniel Day-Lewis -- My Left Foot {"Christy Brown"}  
* Jeremy Irons -- Reversal of Fortune {"Claus Von Bulow"}  
* Geoffrey Rush -- Shine {"David Helfgott"}  
* Adrien Brody -- The Pianist {"Wladyslaw Szpilman"}  
* Jamie Foxx -- Ray {"Ray Charles"}  
* Philip Seymour Hoffman -- Capote {"Truman Capote"}  
Best Actress:
ACTRESS
* Ingrid Bergman -- Anastasia {"The Woman"}  
* Susan Hayward -- I Want To Live! {"Barbara Graham"}  
* Anne Bancroft -- The Miracle Worker {"Annie Sullivan"}  
* Julie Andrews -- Mary Poppins {"Mary Poppins"}  (Yes, she's a real person)
* Katharine Hepburn -- The Lion in Winter {"Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine"} 
[NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Barbra Streisand ('Funny Girl').] 
* Barbra Streisand -- Funny Girl {"Fanny Brice"} 
[NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Katharine Hepburn ('The Lion in Winter').] 
* Sissy Spacek -- Coal Miner's Daughter {"Loretta Lynn"}  
* Susan Sarandon -- Dead Man Walking {"Sister Helen Prejean"}  
* Hilary Swank -- Boys Don't Cry {"Brandon Teena/Teena Brandon"}  
* Julia Roberts -- Erin Brockovich {"Erin Brockovich"}  
* Nicole Kidman -- The Hours {"Virginia Woolf"}  
* Charlize Theron -- Monster {"Aileen Wuornos"}  
* Reese Witherspoon -- Walk the Line {"June Carter"}  
* Helen Mirren -- The Queen {"The Queen"}  
Best Supporting Actress:
* Shelley Winters -- The Diary of Anne Frank {"Mrs. Van Daan"}  
* Patty Duke -- The Miracle Worker {"Helen Keller"}  
* Estelle Parsons -- Bonnie and Clyde {"Blanche Barrow"}  
* Vanessa Redgrave -- Julia {"Julia"}  
* Maureen Stapleton -- Reds {"Emma Goldman"}  
* Brenda Fricker -- My Left Foot {"Mrs. Brown"}  
* Judi Dench -- Shakespeare in Love {"Queen Elizabeth I"}  
* Marcia Gay Harden -- Pollock {"Lee Krasner"}  
* Jennifer Connelly -- A Beautiful Mind {"Alicia Nash"}  
* Cate Blanchett -- The Aviator {"Katharine Hepburn"}  
Best Supporting Actor:
* Joseph Schildkraut -- The Life of Emile Zola {"Captain Alfred Dreyfus"}  
* Walter Brennan -- The Westerner {"Judge Roy Bean"}  
* Edmund Gwenn -- Miracle on 34th Street {"Kris Kringle"}  (Yes, I believe)
* Anthony Quinn -- Viva Zapata! {"Eufemio Zapata"}  
* Anthony Quinn -- Lust for Life {"Paul Gauguin"}  
* Jason Robards -- All the President's Men {"Ben Bradlee"}  
* Jason Robards -- Julia {"Dashiell Hammett"}  
* Martin Landau -- Ed Wood {"Bela Lugosi"}  
* Jim Broadbent -- Iris {"John Bayley"}  
Of course, not all of the above may stand the test of time as being Oscar worthy, but playing a real person in screen is not a new thing.  There are some stellar performances in this bunch if you ask me (and you didn't). 
 
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				BTW, the last re-make to win best picture was Ben-Hur in 1959
			
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 Another film that, to me, does not deserve a best picture nod (way after the fact).  An achievement in film making, yes.  The chariot race, psectacular. The film, a crashing bore.  And I love Wyler, but this is IMO.